Clips from curation of the @newyorkerphoto Instagram page made as the editor of the platform from November 2017—Jan 2021:

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In conjunction with The New Yorker’s Food special issue, Sam Youkilis shared images of food being prepared from his international travels.

Nominated for a 2019 ASME national magazine award for excellence in social media.

Walter Chandoha Archive payed tribute to the photographer known as the “pioneer of cat photography.”

The Brooklyn based photographer, Haruka Sakaguchi shared photographs made while coping with depression during the stay-at-home order.

The photographer Jon Henry shared work from his project “Stranger Fruit,” created in response to the murders of African-American men due to police violence. 

In conjunction with The New Yorker’s Style special issue, the publisher Stanley / Barker shared photographs by the Burkinabe photographer Sanlé Sory from the monograph “Peuple de la Nuit.”

Jess Dugan shared photographs from “To Survive on This Shore: Photographs and Interviews with Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Older Adults” made in collaboration with Vanessa Fabbre and published by Keher Verlag.

The Mexican artist Tania Franco Klein shared their unique tableaus and self-portraits.

Select photographs from the archive of Charles (Teenie) Harris. Born in 1908, Harris, an African-American native of Pittsburgh, documented the city’s Black community from 1935 through the mid-seventies, creating a massive archive.

The photographer KangHee Kim shared works from her series “Street Errands.” She describes her photo collages as a construction of her own form of surreal escapism, made by manipulating images from everyday encounters.

The Kolkata based photographer Jayanta Roy shared beautiful black and white photographs taken in eastern India.

The New York City based photographer, Peter Fisher shared photographs taken from an expedition to South Georgia Island, a biodiversity hotspot situated just south of the Antarctic convergence.

The photographer David Benjamin Sherry shared photographs from the series “American Monuments.” Sherry describes the project as an examination of the relationship between landscape, climate change, color, queer identity, and historical photography.

The photographer Pixy Liao shared collaborative portraits of herself and her partner, Moro, made over twelve years.

On assignment for the @newyorkerphoto Instagram, the photographer Juan Cristóbal Cobo shared images documenting Holy Week in the city of Bogotá, Colombia.

The photographer Hailun Ma shared images from her “Hometown Series” taken in Xinjiang, China. She created this series to document her fascination with the colorful and vibrant Uyghur traditional clothing. 

The artist Rebecca Reeve shared photographs from her studio practice made over a period of seven years. Reeve began making these images during an artist's residency in the Everglades National Park and went on to travel to other national parks throughout the U.S.